Wi-Fi Request

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Wi-Fi Request

Andrew McAfee
Esens colleagues,

I sent out an email earlier requesting some help with a Wi-Fi
presentation that I will be giving next Tuesday. Olle Johansson was
the only one to respond to my request and I am glad that he did.

The work that I am doing will hopefully benefit everyone.

My Wi-Fi presentation is to full faculty members at UNC Chapel Hill. I
am now asking for a short email back to me saying something like,
"I too am electrically sensitive and Wi-Fi radiation makes me sick. I
hope you will support Andrew's petition to turn off the current Wi-Fi
routers in the Kenan Music Building and use routers that can be turned
on/off by the classroom instructors on an as needed basis to minimize
radiation exposure."

You can add anything else you want to validate that this is a real
health issue and that you personally have experience with this
phenomenon.

If you are able to help, please send the email by Sunday Jan. 31 to [hidden email]

It would be great to have 100 emails confirming that I am not the only
one with this problem.

You help is greatly appreciated.

Thank you!
Andrew

Raleigh, NC




[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

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Re: Wi-Fi Request

dianeschou
Attaching an affidavit from Nicols Fox (with medical proof) and a  
letter I wrote.


Diane Schou (skow)
PO Box 99
Green Bank, WV 24944-0099
(304) 456-5558
fax: (304) 932-0022
[hidden email]

On Jan 27, 2010, at 9:12 AM, Andrew McAfee wrote:

> Esens colleagues,
>
> I sent out an email earlier requesting some help with a Wi-Fi
> presentation that I will be giving next Tuesday. Olle Johansson was
> the only one to respond to my request and I am glad that he did.
>
> The work that I am doing will hopefully benefit everyone.
>
> My Wi-Fi presentation is to full faculty members at UNC Chapel Hill. I
> am now asking for a short email back to me saying something like,
> "I too am electrically sensitive and Wi-Fi radiation makes me sick. I
> hope you will support Andrew's petition to turn off the current Wi-Fi
> routers in the Kenan Music Building and use routers that can be turned
> on/off by the classroom instructors on an as needed basis to minimize
> radiation exposure."
>
> You can add anything else you want to validate that this is a real
> health issue and that you personally have experience with this
> phenomenon.
>
> If you are able to help, please send the email by Sunday Jan. 31 to [hidden email]
>
> It would be great to have 100 emails confirming that I am not the only
> one with this problem.
>
> You help is greatly appreciated.
>
> Thank you!
> Andrew
>
> Raleigh, NC
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
>
>











[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

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Re: Wi-Fi Request

Andrew McAfee
Thank you!
On Jan 27, 2010, at 9:28 AM, Diane Schou wrote:

> Attaching an affidavit from Nicols Fox (with medical proof) and a
> letter I wrote.
>
>
> Diane Schou (skow)
> PO Box 99
> Green Bank, WV 24944-0099
> (304) 456-5558
> fax: (304) 932-0022
> [hidden email]
>
> On Jan 27, 2010, at 9:12 AM, Andrew McAfee wrote:
>
>> Esens colleagues,
>>
>> I sent out an email earlier requesting some help with a Wi-Fi
>> presentation that I will be giving next Tuesday. Olle Johansson was
>> the only one to respond to my request and I am glad that he did.
>>
>> The work that I am doing will hopefully benefit everyone.
>>
>> My Wi-Fi presentation is to full faculty members at UNC Chapel
>> Hill. I
>> am now asking for a short email back to me saying something like,
>> "I too am electrically sensitive and Wi-Fi radiation makes me sick. I
>> hope you will support Andrew's petition to turn off the current Wi-Fi
>> routers in the Kenan Music Building and use routers that can be
>> turned
>> on/off by the classroom instructors on an as needed basis to minimize
>> radiation exposure."
>>
>> You can add anything else you want to validate that this is a real
>> health issue and that you personally have experience with this
>> phenomenon.
>>
>> If you are able to help, please send the email by Sunday Jan. 31 to [hidden email]
>>
>> It would be great to have 100 emails confirming that I am not the
>> only
>> one with this problem.
>>
>> You help is greatly appreciated.
>>
>> Thank you!
>> Andrew
>>
>> Raleigh, NC
>>
>> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>>
>>
>>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
>
>
> ------------------------------------
>
> Yahoo! Groups Links
>
>
>

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Re: Wi-Fi Request

BiBrun
In reply to this post by Andrew McAfee
First a statement:

It should be a given that any institution dedicated to enriching people's
minds would not want to risk damaging their brains. Leif Salford's 2003
paper is quite convincing that weak microwaves kill brain cells rather
quickly. Older research going back decades shows changes in EEG (Bise
1978), increased headaches (Frey 1998, and more recent epidemiology), and
other worrying effects.

I myself, and some people I know very well, have had very
clear negative reactions to weak microwave exposure, including cell phones,
cell towers, microwave ovens (microwaves are easily detected several feet
away), cordless phones, and Wi-Fi. For many people, Wi-Fi causes the worst
reaction, which is not surprising given the modulation it uses.

I urge the faculty of UNC Chapel Hill to not only replace all Wi-Fi
connections with ethernet cables, but also monitor all sources of microwave
radiation with the aim of keeping human exposure below the Bioinitiative
Report's recommendation of 1.0 mW/m^2, and 0.1 mW/m^2 for
longer term exosures.

William J. Bruno, Ph.D.
Theoretical Biology & Biophysics
Los Alamos National Laboratory

Here's a good presentation you might gain something
from:
http://www.physics.wisc.edu/undergrads/courses/208-f07/HonorsLectures/Biological%20Electric%20Fields%20-%20Meisel.pdf

Also, read the new GQ article:
http://www.gq.com/cars-gear/gear-and-gadgets/201002/warning-cell-phone-radiation?printable=true

You probably know about the French National Library in
Paris removing Wi-Fi after complaints. You might also
look up work by Frank Barnes (who's in the IEEE) who
has done work showing that tiny but repeated temperature spikes at certain
frequencies can affect cell rhythms.

Finally there are a few good studies of sleep, showing that
sleep is affected hours after exposure, and that modulation matters. Arnetz
2007 <http://piers.mit.edu/piersonline/piers?volume=3&number=7&page=1148>is
one.


On Wed, Jan 27, 2010 at 7:12 AM, Andrew McAfee <[hidden email]> wrote:

>
>
> Esens colleagues,
>
> I sent out an email earlier requesting some help with a Wi-Fi
> presentation that I will be giving next Tuesday. Olle Johansson was
> the only one to respond to my request and I am glad that he did.
>
> The work that I am doing will hopefully benefit everyone.
>
> My Wi-Fi presentation is to full faculty members at UNC Chapel Hill. I
> am now asking for a short email back to me saying something like,
> "I too am electrically sensitive and Wi-Fi radiation makes me sick. I
> hope you will support Andrew's petition to turn off the current Wi-Fi
> routers in the Kenan Music Building and use routers that can be turned
> on/off by the classroom instructors on an as needed basis to minimize
> radiation exposure."
>
> You can add anything else you want to validate that this is a real
> health issue and that you personally have experience with this
> phenomenon.
>
> If you are able to help, please send the email by Sunday Jan. 31 to
> [hidden email] <amcafeerr%40nc.rr.com>
>
> It would be great to have 100 emails confirming that I am not the only
> one with this problem.
>
> You help is greatly appreciated.
>
> Thank you!
> Andrew
>
> Raleigh, NC
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
>  
>


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]